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mcdull

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  1. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from David & Diana R in Military spouses and trying to be above the law.   
    question, could a military spouse kill somebody and get away with it?
     
    if not, what difference would it make when they broke this country's immigration law, they are righteously prosecuted?
  2. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Springrain22 in Military spouses and trying to be above the law.   
    question, could a military spouse kill somebody and get away with it?
     
    if not, what difference would it make when they broke this country's immigration law, they are righteously prosecuted?
  3. Haha
    mcdull got a reaction from George & Roth in Sister in law Tourist Visa Question   
    Don't push your luck.  
  4. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from David & Diana R in Sister in law Tourist Visa Question   
    Don't push your luck.  
  5. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Llfa in My experience taking the oath without a green card   
    Yep.  If you are traveling out of the country within 2 weeks, you could expedite at the passport agency.  
  6. Confused
    mcdull got a reaction from EmilyW in How to marry morocco man?   
  7. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Bure in How to marry morocco man?   
  8. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from scottishlander in N-400 Final Online Status?   
    naturalization certificate is issued.
  9. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from yuna628 in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  10. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from isla543 in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  11. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Ortolan in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  12. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Devy and Lynette in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  13. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from KazuriSana in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  14. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Unidentified in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    Honestly, because I really decided to wear jeans the last minute, I was going to wear my national clothes.  And I didn’t want to explain because we were already running late. 
     
    I did tell him later.  
  15. Haha
    mcdull got a reaction from Unidentified in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    I like to drive him crazy, and i do that almost every day.
  16. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Michelle M in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  17. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Mary Lou in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  18. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Unidentified in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  19. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from geowrian in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  20. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from AshMarty in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  21. Haha
    mcdull got a reaction from Jaquelly in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    I like to drive him crazy, and i do that almost every day.
  22. Haha
    mcdull got a reaction from Paul & Mallory in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    I like to drive him crazy, and i do that almost every day.
  23. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Little_Vixen in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  24. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Dutchster in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
  25. Like
    mcdull got a reaction from Paul & Mallory in I wore jeans to my oath ceremony.   
    "Honey, you sure you don't want to change?" My husband yelled as he was jumping out of the shower.  "You look gorgeous in that cheongsam!"
     
    "I am 100% sure!" 
     
    My husband was baffled. Why would I wear jeans at a such solemn event? on this very day I became an American?
     
    little did he know,  I wore it to honour my aunt, who was killed by the Chinese communists over a pair of blue jeans.
     
    My dad escaped the Chinese civil war and arrived in Hong Kong, left behind two other  siblings who remained in communist controlled China. Dad worked few odd jobs so that every time we visited our relatives, we would be able to bring necessities, be flour, rice, clothes, radio or even salt and sugar.
     
    I still remember my dad's loud cry when upon returning to China, he learned my aunt had committed suicide, over the very pair of jeans he brought her from Hong Kong.
     
    Only when I grew up, I heard the story from my cousin that auntie Mui lost her life to the heydays of cultural revolution, when every single wrong doing could land you in jail and every little mistake earned you a good beating.  Jeans in all the madness became a gesture of contradicting  supreme leader Mao and a symbol of supporting American Imperialism.
     
    So her very friend and comrade stripped her and did the unthinkable and unspeakable in public.  My aunt couldn't take the humiliation and took her own life the same afternoon.
     
    As years go by, all my families escaped communist China and landed in Hong Kong, Aunt Mui was gone, but she was never forgotten. 
     
    And that is why I wore jeans, a indisputable symbol of Americanism at my oath ceremony, and if aunt Mui is above there somewhere watching over me, she knew I did it for her honour.
     
     
     
     
     
     
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